In following years he was to become well known for his protests against
ecumenism and
Roman Catholicism. These protests took him all over the world, including
Italy,
Sweden,
Switzerland,
Kenya,
Canada and throughout the
UK. This culminated in a series of protests against the
Papal visit to Britain in 1982, the first time a reigning
Pope had set foot on the nominally Protestant island. For added publicity, Glass had put himself up as a candidate in the
Glasgow Hillhead by-election on 25 March 1982. Under the description 'Protestant Crusade against the Papal Visit' he got 388 votes. Glass had stood for Parliament before; having been a candidate in the
Glasgow Bridgeton constituency, a safe Labour seat, at the
1970 general election. Standing as an Independent Protestant, he received 1,180 votes (6.7% of the poll). On 1 June 1982, Glass and
Ian Paisley jointly led a protest march through Glasgow which culminated in a demonstration near the landing site of the Papal helicopter in
Bellahouston Park. Glass and Paisley are said to have led the crowd in shouts of "The Beast is Coming", "No Surrender" and "Down with the Pope of Rome". Alongside this, Glass had debated at many Scottish and English universities, including
Durham and
Cambridge. He was recognized as a
Biblical literalist. Glass protested against ecumenism and, as he perceived it, the sins of an increasingly ungodly generation. He regularly preached four sermons a week. He campaigned against perceived
blasphemy on many occasions. He protested against films (
The Last Temptation of Christ), plays (
Corpus Christi), and comedians (notably
Billy Connolly's crucifixion skit). When protests by Glass led to an increase in ticket sales for the Glasgow performance of the comic stage version of The Bible by the
Reduced Shakespeare Company, the company announced they would like to offer Glass a free ticket as thanks. Glass often joined Paisley in his protests against
Irish Republicanism and against the
Irish Republican Army and papal authority in
Northern Ireland. Paisley however once noted that Jack Glass was "a bit of an extremist". ==Death==